Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914, November 14, 1912, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    RETURN OF MARINO
Tragedy and Romance In Home-
oomlng of Soldier.
■y L1WIB JAMES.
The hand of old Papa TzantiH trem-
blod Tho day's doing» had boon all
wrong, and In his capacity aa ▼lllaga
priest at Mttrtana he bad been un­
able to help himself.
And then th» new» had coma. It
had spread rapidly, flrat In whispers
and later, whan men’s excitement
could no longer bn restrained. In joy-
out shouts
"Marino la coming! Our Marino!
Karlatinakl, the Cretan eagle' Our
hero!
The slayer of Bulgaria! The
savior of the oppressed!
He Is com­
ing home."
Papa Ttantlll went Into his house on
the outskirts of tbe village He wish­
ed to avoid being questioned.
He
sat In his little room upstairs and
gated sadly toward the quay.
Toward evening a steamboat churn­
ed her way between tho northern pro­
montory of the Island and the barren
rock which rose sentinel a quarter of
a mile off.
In the stem of tbe vessel stood a
huge man with hl* hands upon the
converging bulwark
He was a Cre­
tan born, to judge by hla dress, which
he had donned for the special occa­
sion of hla homecoming.
He looked before him fixedly, and
joy Aereo and glorious joy filled bls
•yes
As the boat began to pass under the
promontory, a little caique shot round
a projecting rock, followed by another
and another And as they came within
balling distance, their crews began
to shout.
At first It seemed to the
Cretan that these were but tho usual
overtures of a varkarl soliciting pas­
sengers from the anchorage to tho
quay. But with a sudden hot flush of
pleasure he soon realised the truth
Home one had told the nows of hla
coming They wore shouting his name
In welcome.
But Marino had other plans In view.
He wax well aware that once among
this exuberant throng on shore It
might be hours before he could tear
himself away, and the first joys of his
home-coming must be unobserved.
Ro, not loath to enjoy the triumph,
but wishing to postpone It, hn pre­
vailed upon the skipper to land him In
a secluded cove 20 minutes or more
before tho vessel should reach Its
appointed haven that he might first
visit tho hom<* of his fiance
Marino stepped ashore and gazed
about him nt tho familiar scene.
Ho .scrambled up the rocks a little
way so that tho view might be ex­
tended. Then ho caught the sound of
voices overhead, and presently ho saw
the figure of a small boy emerge from
a shallow cleft, and, with a frightened
glance behind him, run up the zigzag
path beyond
In another second the Cretan discov­
ered what the boy had been doing. A
skin of wine lay at the entrance to the
cleft, and aa he advanced silently he
could make out tho form of a man
seated In tbe shadow.
Ho was eat­
ing some food tho boy hnd brought
Ths soldier stopped and stared That
gome solitary Individual should eaj
bls supper on a desolate cliff was not
so singular, but that he should be
clothed In ceremonious black, that an
excessively high collar, resplendent
from an Athens laundry, should encir­
cle his neck, were surprising.
For a whole minute they stared at
each other.
"You are frightened, D’Metrl?" Ma­
rino asked shortly, grinning In con­
tempt and amusement.
"You didn't
expect to see me hero so soon. You
thought I was still with the bands. Is
It not so. D’metrt?"
"That Is true," the fellow whined.
"Have mercy on me! I did not moan
to Injure you; I couldn't help my­
self.”
"That you could not help yourself
from running when under fire I can
quite believe, hut that afterward you
should turn traitor and betray us Into
the—"
He saw D'motri'a hand slide Into
his pocket, and tho next Instant his
own flashed over his head. One short
scream strangled In tho coward's
throat, and Marino's knife struck home
again.
For a moment or two tho soldier
stood over him, his faco glowering,
then without a bnckward glance con­
tinued the ascent.
Righteous Indignation lent addition­
al vigor to Marino's stride, and In a
few minutes ho had mounted the zlg-
r.ag path and stood upon tho rock
road whloh led to the cottage. As he
camo nearer he saw tho small boy
who had brought food for D’metrl sit­
ting at tho* roadside, cutting up an
onion with a big knife. As the Cre­
tan approached the lad started up In
terror and began to run.
"Atop!" cried Marino. "Cdmohere;
1 will not hurt you, little one.”
The big man's voice was kind, and
the boy obeyed. For a while they
looked at each other, In the gathering
dusk.
Then, with a shout, Marino
laid his hands upon the boy’s shoul­
ders.
"It Is my little Adonl!” he cried, for­
getting all else. "My little Adonl,
grown so big as not to be recog­
nized!"
"Why, It Is Marino! And I did not
know you !n that dress.
And how
red you are!
And—Oh, what a cut
that Is upon your cheek!"
"Tell me, Adonl— how does your lit­
tle sister? Tell mo of Marlanthe.”
"Marlanthe Is well," and the boy
looked away. "We thought that you
were dead.”
"Dead! Why? Men came In boats
from the town to meet mo. They did
not believe me dead. They expected
me -living."
"The news of your coming arrived
only today. Wo thought that you had
been killed.” and again Adonl avoided
Marino's gaze; then, with startled sud-
denness, ths lad hid hla faco against
tho big man's sleeve and began to
cry.
And before Marino could bold
him Adonl broke away and fled.
Homelhlng was wrong. The heart
of the fierce warrior beat audibly,
"I will go to Marlanthe,” he said,
and strode forth.
As he approached the house a
man darted out. and. brushing by him
without a word, sped away In tbe di­
rection of the village.
ills gruy beard told Marina that
this was the father of Marlanthe.
"They are fleet of foot tonight,”
thought he, and came to tbe door.
It was open, and the dim light just
sufficed to show him tbe one roolta
of which the place consisted.
There was an armchair by tbe open
window, and in It a woman rocked to
and fro In an agony of grief.
Marino stood silent for several mo­
ments. Then he went In and took the
woman In his amis.
"Marlanthe, my loved one, I have
come back to you!”
For a moment her arms were about
his neck, and she rals«d her eyes to
hla and looked at him sorrowfully.
"I)o you not say anything to me?”
"Why did you not come soonerF’
in a whisper so low as scarcely to be
heard.
"I have come aa soon as It was pos­
sible. Why do you look so at me!"
He broke off and seized her hands,
and covered them with kisses.
"Adont said that the story came
that I had been killed."
"Yes. They brought the cap I made
for you, all stained with blood end
torn by a bullet."
"1 lost the cap six months ago. But
they brought It—who?”
For the first time the shadow of sus­
picion crossed his mind.
He was
stroking her hands still, waiting for
her to speak. Then as his grip tight-
cued upon tho Angers of her left hand,
he felt something that bo had not no­
ticed before.
His heart seemed to
stop.
Oray bands of fear tore at
him. but ho remained silent.
"D’metrt. He camo back In the
spring Ho said that you were killed
at his side.”
"Ay—and then?” Tho words hissed
away her hands from him.
"And then—and then,” she cried,
"he came to my old father. For a
long time nothing was said to me, but
I know now that It was arranged be­
tween them that I should marry
D'mntrl.
Ah, do not look at me so!
Oh. Marino, my loved one, there was
no life for me when you were dead.
Thero was nothing.
But I loathed
D'metrt. 1 tried to flee away from the
Island, but they brought me back And
at length—at length I was forced to
give in.
Marino, mine, If you had
come but yesterday!’’
"What do you say—yesterday?"
"Papa Tzantlll married us today, and
Just as we had sat down to eat aft­
erward a man arrived from Athens,
saying you were not only alive, but
were coming by the next steamer to
Mltrlane."
Marino rose, and roughly dragged
the gold ring from her Anger. For a
moment he looked out of the window,
watching the afterglow of the sun­
set above the horizon. Far below an
easy tide lapped against the rocks.
Half-way between lay one whe was
white and cold and stared forth from
tho rock cleft.
He held tho ring In the palm of hla
hand.
"Our forefathers burned ornaments
of gold with tflelr dead." he said, and
burst into a roar of laughter.
"Oo and comfort thy master!" he
shouted, and hurled the ring away.
CHILDREN
TURKISH FORCES
WANT TO FIGHT
Troops Repudiate Government’s
Efforts tor Mediation.
VENTRILOQUISM AMONG BIROS
Many Songsters Have Notae That Are
Difficult to Place—Grasshopper
is Big Offender.
Ventriloquism la not conflned solely
to the human race. London Answers
assert». There are many birds whose
notes It la almost impossible "to
place."
Take the corncrake, with Its harsh
"crake, crake!" One moment the
sound Is by your feet; the next, fifty
yards away. The grasshopper Is an­
other offender In this respect. Its sib­
ilant note is hard to locate.
Tbe sedge warbler goes one better.
Not only la It an accomplished ventrlL
oqulat, but it wtll mimic or parody the
song of other birds In a lessor degree
the redbreast and the crow possess
these powers, and foreign doves come
under th« same category.
In Brazil the bell bird la exception
ally skillful with Its voice, while the
American chickadee Invariably de­
ceives the listener Canada boasts of
a partridge which Is known to deceive
sportsmen as to Its whereabouts for
hours on end.
Porte’s Position Complicated by Hav­
ing Io Withdraw Request—Cry
of "No Surrender" Grows.
Ixmdon—Press and public opinion in
St. Petersburg, according to a dis­
patch to the Daily Mail from the ¡Rus­
sian capital, consider a conflict be­
tween Russia and Austria imminent if
Austria continues to threaten Servia.
The Berlin correspondent of tbe
Daily Mail learns that tbe threads of
the Austro-Servian crisis are now in
the bands of the German secretary of
foreign affairs, Herr Von Kiderlin
W»echter, who is working on a form­
ula designed to appease both Austria
•nd Servia.
OREGON GOES FOR WILSON.
Lane Democrat, for U. 8. Senator-
Woman Suffrage Safe.
Portland, Nov. 7.—Any lingering
doubt thatjmay have existed of Wood­
row JVilsoa’s victory in Oregon were
removed by the receipt of fuller re­
turns from Multnomah county and tbe
state at large, but the figures still
failed to give final results on the sen­
atorial situation.
Tbe return» leave oo room for
doubt as to any results on the state
ticket
and
congressional
ticket
Hawley, in tbe First, Sinnott, in the
Second, and Lafferty, in the Third,
are well to the good over their oppo­
nents.
Olcott is elected secretary of state
Mickle, dairy and food commissioner,
and Aitcbiaon, railroad commissioner.
If present ratios be carried out,
Wilson will have a plurality over
Roosevelt of about 7500.
There is still an element of doubt as
to whether Roosevelt or Taft will win
second place, but the outlook seems to
favor Roosevelt. In the state outside
of tbe county, Roosevelt and Taft to­
tals are almost identical, but k Mult­
nomah county the returns indicate a
final lead for Roosevelt over Taft of
abou 2000.
With about one-half tbe vote count­
ed in Multnomah county and the state
outside, the totals on president are as
follows:
Wilson 21,088, Roosevelt 17,341,
Taft 16,196.
Returns for about one-half the vote
outside of Portland are at hand and
these added to tbe Multnomah county
figures, which are also representative
of about one-hidf the vote, give Sell­
ing a slight lead.
However ’he out­
side vote is more nearly compete from
the anti-Selling counties than from
those that are supposed to go for the
Republican candidate.
The latest figures are as follows:
Selling 20,496 Lane 20,512 Bourne
13,592, Clark 5697, Paget 3095. This
gives Lane a lead of 178 votes and
indicates a final plurality against
Bourne of about 12,000.
Constantinople — Tbe situation has
taken a change for the worse. A
grave international crisis seems pend­
ing. On the one hand tbe position of
the government is seriously compro­
mised because tbe army repudiates the
mediation proposition.
On tbe other
band the committee of Union and Pro­
gress is giving evidence of renewed
activity, while Turkish feeling, both
national and religious, is being work­
ed to fever pitch by the preaching in
MOST AMUSING LITTLE TOY the mosques ar^l by tbe impassioned
language of the press.
Figures of Two Boxers Swing Back
The most serious feature of the sit­
and Forth Under Impact of Blows
uation is the weakness of the govern­
—Heads Are Separated.
ment in having first to apply for med­
iation to secure an armistice, later re­
A most amusing toy that can be questing mediation, pure and simple,
made by any ingenious boy has been and then virtually being obliged to
patented by an Illinois man. It con­ yield to the army which repudiates
sists of a piece of cardboard or thin mediation.
Probably only the fact
wood upon which the figures of two that the powers have not replied to
boxers swing back and forth under the request for mediation prevented a
ministerial crisis and extricated the
government, as it will not now be
SUFFRAGE HAS 8LIGHT LEAD
called upon to take any action.
The committee of Union and Pro­
gress has taken up strongly the cry of Too Many Road Measures Brings On
“no surrender.”
Defeat of All.
London—The Daily Telegraph’s cor­
respondent says:
“Tbe decision has been reached that
the sultan and government shall re­
main in the capital, even if the troops
of the allies enter. Tbe heir apparent
and the other princes have expressed
strong opinions that it would be
shameful and exceedingly dangerous
to abandon Constantinople and retreat
to Bresau.
“Tbe opinion is gaining ground that
the differences of the powers may
bring about a European war by which
Turkey might profit and might re­
establish her position if she resists
long enough to muster into line new
levies from Asia, numbering 500,000
An Amusing Toy.
men, when the general conflagration
breaks out. Several high officials at
the Impact of their blows.
These Tchatalja demand that the new troops
blows, by the way. are delivered by from the Black Sea and also tbe for­
the operator's Angers, which are mer army of Thrace be given a chance
thrust through openings In the shoul­ to fight.”
ders of the figures and have miniature
boxing gloves fastened on the tips,
converting them into lifelike looking
arms. The lower portion of the fight­
ers—from the waist down—is drawn
on the card but their torsos and heads
Washington, D. C.—Acorn crop of
are in separate pieces, pivoted at the
waist, so that they swing freely. 8,169,137,000 bushels, or 381,921,000
There is a stop, however, so that If bushels more than tbe greatest crop of
one of the men gets an unusually corn ever before grown in any country
vigorous punch In tho jaw be will of the world, is the feature of the
only bend back to a certain point and country’s most remarkable agricultur­
will spring forward again to the fray. al year in history, according to the
November crop report of the Federal
department of agriculture.
RIDDLES.
This great crop of corn was worth
What is the longest sentence known on November 1 to farmers $1,850,-
776,000.
to history? Sentence for life.
The enormuous sum of $4,171,134,-
What is it that you give away all of
it and can still keep all of it? Your 000 represented the farm value on No­
vember 1 of the crops of corn, hay,
promise.
Why Is Cupid a poor marksman? wheat, oats, potatoes, barley, flax­
seed, rye and buckwheat
With tbe
He is always making Mrs. (misses).
What does Washington. D. C„ stand value of the growing cotton crop and
for? Washington. Daddy of His Coun­ the crops of tobacco, rice and apples,
the aggregate value of these principal
try.
farm products will amount well be­
What is the last thing you take off yond
¿5,000,000,000.
before going to bed? Your feet from
Record crops of corn, potatoes, flax­
off the floor.
When is a woman not a woman? seed, oats, barley, rye and hay were
harvested this year.
When she is a little cross.
Influence of tho Cinematograph.
A striking Illustration of the in­
fluence of the ubiquitous cinemato­
graph Is reported by the American
consulate at Belgrade American fasb.
Ions have recently become very pop»
lar with the young men of that city;
there Is an unprecedented demand al
the local shops for hats, boots and otix
er wearing apparel similar to that is
vogue In the United States, and ths
American style of hair cutting has
come Into favor. These Innovations
are unmistakably the result of the ex.
bibitlon of moving pictures of Ameri
can origin. The obvious moral of all
this, as the consul points out. Is that
the cinematograph might be used tc
great advantage In advertising all POODLE DOG LOSES ONE LEG
kinds of American products. For In
Victim of Stret Car Accident Is Furn­
stance, pictures of American agricui
ished With Artificial Limb by
turnl machinery (n operation woul«
Sympathetic Boy.
probably create a great demnnd foi
•
tho thing Itself. Thia plan offers az
A very Intelligent white poodle dog
economical substitute for the actual
which had one of its forelegs cut off
exhibition of American products It
in a street car accident wandered out
commercial museums and the like.
into the country and was adopted by
a farm boy. 11« took the dog to a
Woman’s Perilous Climb.
doctor, who dressed the leg, and when
A daring feat was performed th« It healed the boy fitted an artificial
other day by Miss Whitehouse,’ t leg over the stump with a laced glove
schoolmistress at Far Cotton schools top and a little rubber pad for the
Northampton.
Tho young womar foot. With this leg the dog travels
climbed tho chimney of the brick almost ss well as ever, but occasion-
work here and walked round th<
steeplejack's scaffolding at the top, i
height of 250 feet. Rhe was provide«
with a linp rope and climbing Irons
but she dispensed with the line snf
went to the top with only two rests
When sho reached the scaffolding ai
the top she had to climb over a pro
jecting rim. which Is girdled by a nar
row plank footway, and stand on i
single 11-lnch plank. Rhe remain««
at the top of the chimney for about i
quarter of an hour, talking with th< alL loses his artificial aid to locomo
steeplejacks. Miss Whitehouse, In ai cion when looking for woodchucks.
Interview, said she did not feel at al
Point In Her Favor.
frightened during her climb and de
"A female fly lays 130,000 eggs a
scent. She quite enjoyed the magnl
fleent panoramic view of Northamptoi season."
"Well, she doesn't cackle, anyhow."
and the floods along the Nene Valley
1912 CORN CROP LARGEST
IN HISTORY OF COUNTRY
Data Ship Beats Rival.
New York—-The steamship Turke­
stan, Port Said to New York, with 8,-
000,000 pounds of Persian dates in her
hold, beat into this port the steamer
Stanhope, also from Port Said, with
7,000,000 pounds of dates, and there­
by won a bonus of $2500 for her crew
and $8000 for her consignees. By the
time the Stanhope reaches New York,
dealers in dates will be well supplied
and the price will have fallen from 4f
to 3| cents a pound.
The Turkestan
made her winning trip despite a fire
in her bunkers that burned for 12 days.
»’Cutter Unalga Is on Way.
Washington, D. C.—Moved to ac­
tion by the impending crisis in the
Balkans, the United States govern­
ment intercepted the American rev­
enue cutter Unalga at Port Said on
her maiden voyage around the world
and ordered her to rush to the coast of
Asiatic Turkey to protect American
life and property in the event of a
Moslem uprising against foreigners.
The Unalga will patrol the coast of
Asia Minor.
Portland, Or., Nov. 7.—The count
at 2:30 a. m. in Multnomah county
on woman suffrage was:
Yes 8029;
no 7627.
State, outside of Multnomah coun­
ty: Yes 12,210, no 11,361. -
The Malarkey public service bill,
submitted by referendum, it is indi­
cated, will have a substantial major­
ity.
As was forecast, the three-cornered
controversy over road measures ap­
parently has resulted in the defeat of
all plans, although
the harmony
amendment limiting county indebted­
ness for roads is in doubt. Seemingly
all tax measures submitted by the tax
commission and legislature, except
tbe repeal of county tax option and
probably the bill excepting the ex­
emption of household effects, have
been rejected.
Tbe capital punishment bill, which,
if adopted, would have abolished the
death penalty in Oregon, is defeated
according to incomplete returns by up­
ward of 20,000 votes.
The Cascade
county measure is snowed under and
the hotel inspector bill is in the run­
ning for cellar championship.
Tbe
blue-sky law also seems to have gone
to its death in the avalanche of
“noes.” It is probable that the anti­
boycott bill has been defeated, but
there is still doubt as to the anti­
street speaking law.
LISTER BEATS
HAY BY 886
Washington Strong for Roose­
velt for President.
Many Progressives Got Places—Fal­
coner and Bryan Elected Rep­
resentatives st Large.
Seattle, Wash., Nov. 12. — Ernest
Lister’s lead for governor was in­
creased 123 vote» today when a re­
check of the returns in Snohomish
county was made. Lister’s plurality
over Governor Marion E. Hay is now
886. The total vote for tbe state,
with 17 precinets still unreported, is:
Lister, Democrat, 96,459, Hay, Re­
publican, 95,578.
Seattle, Nov. 7.—Returns from 951
precincts out of 1903 give Roosevelt
54,745, Wilson 43,405, Taft 34,687.
For governor 927 precincts give Lis­
ter, Dem., 43,867; Hay, Republican,
42,079; Hodge, Progressive, 83,251.
For congressman-st-large, 860 pre­
cincts give Falconer, Progressive, 38,-
000; Bryan, Progressive,
36,976;
Frost, Republican, 4,191; Dewey,
Republican, 33.795; Connor, Demo­
crat, 32,082; White, Democrat, 29,-
696.
Seattle, Nov. 7.—Theodore Roose­
velt’s plurality over Woodrow Wilson
in Washington is estimated at 23,000.
Earnest Lister, Democratic candidate
for governor, was elected by a plural­
ity estimated at 8000 over Governor
Hay, Republican.
J. A. Falconer and J. W. Bryan,
Roosevelt Progressives, probably are
elected representatives-at-large over
tbe Republican candidates, H. B Dew­
ey and J. E. Frost, by 5000 plurality.
In the First district one-sixth of the
precincts give Representatives Will
E. Humphrey, Republican, 16,000 plu­
rality over Charles G. Heifner, Demo­
crat
One-fourth of the precincts in the
Third district give Representative
William Lafollette, Republican. 440
plurality over F. M. Goodwin, Roose­
velt Progressive.
Returns from
Southwest Washington indicate the
defeat of Congressman Stanton War­
burton, Roosevelt Progressive, by Al­
bert Johnson, Republican.
Warbur­
ton leads in Tacoma, but this lead,
according to available returns, will be
more than offset by Johnson’s ap­
parent big advantage in the Grays
Harbor section.
Vancouver, Wash., Nov. 7.—Com­
plete returns, semi-official, from 26
out of 36 precincts in Clark county
give:
For president—Taft 1216, Wilson
1601, Roosevelt 1247.
Congressman­
at-large—Frost, 1363, Dewey, 1452
Connors 1123, White 1059, Brown,
738, Falconer 756; District, Johnson
945, Munday 2396, Warburton 723.
Governor — Hay 1556, Lister 1425,
Hodge 767, Hart 1601, Collier 1210,
Teats 720. Secretary of state—How­
ell 1631, Ryan 1134.
Treasurer—
Ford 746, Meath 1551, Gilbert, 1127,
Corey 826. Aaditor—Claussen 1617,
Stevenson 1116, Moberg 718.
For attorney general—Tanner 1586,
Jones 1125, Mills 736. Land commis­
sioner—Savidge 1714, Schooley 1078
and Kaufman 708. Superintendent of
public instruction — Mrs. Prescott
1600, Mrs. Monroe 1122, Beach 793.
Insurance commissioner—Fishback
1677, Murphy 1129, Collins 704.
The vote on the [amendments to the
state constituttion follow:
No. 1,
removing limit from terms of office,
for 902, against 1214. No. 2, recall
of judges, for 1722, against 539. No.
3,
Initiative and referendum, for
1582, against 565.
No. 4, setting
time for new laws becoming effective,
for 975, aganst 806.
Collage Wireless Successful.
Oregon Agricultural College, Cor­
vallis—A wireless message sent from
San Diego station, 1400 miles south of
Corvallis, was heard perfectly dis­
tinctly by Joe Hallock, junior, and
Cliff Watson, freshman, both electri­
cal engineering students at the Ore-,
gon Agricultural college.
They had
temporarily booked up to a tree in
front of the Gamma Upsilon bouse a
“Wsts” and "Drys” Broak Even.
30-foot single wire aerial, to call some
of their friends who are operating
Seattle—Ths “dry” and “wet” is­
Marconi wires along the coast. They sue in Washington was one of the
also picked up Victoria, B. C., San most important local questions to
Francisco and several steamers at sea. come up. The victory is about even
for the saloon and anti-saloon forces.
Michigan Conceded to Roosevelt.
Licensed saloons won out in several
Detroit—Returns from 145 out of instances but the general tendency
Kenne­
2115 state precincts show Taft 12,347, was to maintain prohibition.
Roosevelt 20,330, Wilson, 16,66. This wick, which has waged a bitter fight,
does not include the incomplete count voted to remain dry, and Vancouver,
in many Detroit precincts. It is con­ after a spirited contest, decided to
ceded that Roosevelt will carry the stay weL
state.
________________
Oil Dividend Declared.
Socialists Second in Florida.
San
Francisco
—The 16th dividend
Jacksonville, Fla.—Returns indicate
that the entire Democratic ticket is on the stock of the Standard Oil com­
elected by a majority of about 220,000. pany incorporated in California was
The Socialists apparently polled a declared Wednesday by tbe board of
larger votq than either the Republi­ directors of the company at a meeting
held in Richmond, Contra
Costa
cans or Roosevelt Progressives.
county. A dividend of $2.50 per share
will be awarded on December 15 to all
Chehalis Goes Republican.
stockholders having stock of record on
Aberdeen, Wash. — Twenty-three December 2. The issued stock is now
complete out of 57 precincts, in Che­ valued at $45,000,000. It was in 1910
halis county give Taft 1149, Wilson that the last dividend was declared.
795, Debs 806, Roosevelt 721.
Hay
Kansas for T. R, By IO.OOO.
1535, Lister 789, Hodge 529. Johnson
1517, Munday 540, Warburton 714,
Topeka, Kan.—Returns at the latest
Frost 1405, Dewey 1417, Connor 593, indicated that Roosevelt would carry
White 605, Bryan 608, Falconer 580. Kansas over Wilson by probably 10,000
Socialist Candidate Aller ran ahead of plurality. Taft apparently was run­
Warburton in Aberdeen by round 100 ning a poor third.
votes. Johnson will go out of the
Capper, Rep., for governor, was
county with 1800 or 2000 plurality. leading Hodges, Dem., and Stubbs,
The entire state and county ticket Re­ Rep., for United States senator, was
publican.
slightly ahead of Thompson, Dem.
Russia Protests Occupation,
Viena—The Neue Frei Presse says
it has learned the entry of the Bulgar­ South Carolina 50,000 Democratic Mississippi Democratic By 105,000
Jackson, Miss. — The Democratic
Columbia, S. C. — Indications are
ian army into Constantinople is con­
sidered doubtful, as Russia is protest­ that Wilson has carried South Caro­ majority in Mississippi is estimated
at 105,000.
ing against such action.
lina by more than 50,000 majority.